Poco - From the Inside (Reissue, Remastered) (1971/2013) Lossless

  • 24 Mar, 07:32
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Artist:
Title: From the Inside
Year Of Release: 1971/2013
Label: Iconoclassic Records/Sony
Genre: Classic Rock, Country Rock
Quality: Flac (tracks, .cue, log)
Total Time: 44:54
Total Size: 372 Mb (scans)
WebSite:

Poco - From the Inside (Reissue, Remastered) (1971/2013) Lossless


Tracklist:

01. Hoe Down (Richie Furay / Rusty Young) 02:08
02. Bad Weather (Paul Cotton) 05:05
03. What Am I Gonna Do (Richie Furay) 03:49
04. You Are the One (Richie Furay) 03:52
05. Railroad Days (Paul Cotton) 03:38
06. From the Inside (Timothy B. Schmit) 03:14
07. Do You Feel It Too (Richie Furay) 05:35
08. Ol’ Forgiver (Paul Cotton) 03:42
09. What If I Should Say I Love You (Richie Furay) 03:36
10. Just for Me and You (Richie Furay) 03:45

Bonus Tracks:
11. C’mon [Unreleased Studio Version] (Richie Furay) 02:54
12. A Man Like Me [Unreleased Studio Version] (Richie Furay) 03:36

Line-up::
Richie Furay: vocals, rhythm guitar
Rusty Young: pedal steel guitar, dobro
George Grantham: vocals, drums
Tim Schmit: vocals, bass
Paul Cotton: vocals, lead (electric) guitar

From the Inside is Poco’s most unusual record, and one the band—especially founder Richie Furay, whose songs were sort of pushed into the background—finally didn’t like all that much. But it was a very good one anyway, produced in Memphis by guitar legend Steve Cropper and featuring the group generating a leaner, more stripped-down, somewhat bluesier sound. The harmonies are less radiant and the guitars more subdued, and the spirits also a little more low-key than usual. But the sound they get is still appealing, the singing more reflective and a little bit closer to R&B than to the post-Byrds country-rock for which they were known—the songs are pretty, and in listening terms George Grantham’s drums and Timothy B. Schmit’s bass are nice and upfront in the mix, and the guitars have a really close presence, even if they are turned down. Paul Cotton’s “Bad Weather” was the best reviewed song, but other highlights were “You Are the One,” “Hoe Down,” “Railroad Days” (maybe their hardest rocker), and “Ol’ Forgiver.” (Bruce Eder, AllMusic)


  • myto
  •  08:44
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Many thanks
  • angel44
  •  10:18
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Many Thanks
  • whiskers
  •  11:31
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Many Thanks
  • mufty77
  •  13:15
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Many thanks for lossless.
  • mldekker
  •  19:08
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Veel Dank !!